engine compression levels. What is the correct cylinder compression reading on a standard 40 hp Ford engine. What would be normal on a 40-year-old rebuilt engine? I'm getting 52lbs on all 4 cylinders. Any input out there?
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Re: engine compression levels. Stock compression ratio was 4.2:1. So --- 90 some years later, not accounting for any rebuilds, you look about right. What's particularly good is that all cylinders are the same. That's rare and that's great. I'll say you have nothing to worry about. By the way, 4.2 at sea level would be around 62 PSI.
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Re: engine compression levels. 52 is pretty good.
If you have a standard head the math would be: 4.2x14.7. About 60 lbs on a new engine. Some say the formula should be 4.2x14.7+14.7. |
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Re: engine compression levels. Isn't a contribution test used to isolate a single bad cylinder? It wouldn't really tell you if all the cylinders were equally worn.
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Re: engine compression levels. Absolute compression pressure = (4.22x14.7)+14.7.
Gauge compression Pressure = 4.22x14.7. We work with gauges. Scientists work with absolute pressure. |
Re: engine compression levels. My rule of thumb is that Model A & Model B engines with stock cylinder heads will run well on compression gauge readings as ow as 50 psig, and no more than a 5 psig difference between cylinders.
By the way, boring an engine increases its compression ratio a bit. |
Re: engine compression levels. My engine has been sleeve back to the original bore size and has the original 4.2 compression head my compression readings are basically 60-65 on all 4 cylinders.
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Re: engine compression levels. Here’s an example of a device that could be used to do contribution testing.
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...87c4ac0fbe.jpg |
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